The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
bright-beaver-199

Car jumped my curb and destroyed my yard decorations — am I stuck with what I paid years ago?

So this past weekend a driver lost control and hopped the curb right into my front yard, absolutely demolishing my holiday display. The centerpiece was this massive inflatable that I'd hunted down for years — finally found one at an estate sale a while back for a fraction of what they go for new. It was in perfect shape, fully functional, and honestly irreplaceable at what I paid for it.

The driver's insurance has already accepted liability, which is great I guess. But when I called to start the claim, the adjuster kept circling back to 'what did you pay for it originally.' The problem is that what I paid has basically nothing to do with what it costs to actually replace it right now. The same item new runs significantly more than I paid — and the only ones currently available are through resellers at a serious markup.

I also lost a couple of smaller decorations that were part of the same display. None of it is cheap to replace.

The adjuster wasn't hostile or anything, just kind of robotic — kept saying I need to 'provide documentation.' Cool, but documentation of what exactly? I don't have a receipt from an estate sale. I have photos of the stuff in my yard. I have screenshots of what comparable items are selling for right now online.

Has anyone dealt with property damage to something that isn't a car through someone else's insurance? Do they have to cover actual replacement cost or just what you originally paid? Any tips on what kinds of documentation actually move the needle with adjusters would be really helpful right now.

10replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

10 replies

  • 8
    hearty-marmot-181

    Ugh, I went through almost the exact same runaround when someone backed into my fence and a custom gate I'd had built. The adjuster kept asking for the original invoice, which I didn't have anymore. What finally worked for me was pulling together a few contractor quotes for comparable replacement work and submitting those as my 'documentation.' It shifted the conversation from what I paid to what it actually costs to make me whole again. Hang in there — it's annoying but not hopeless.

    • 17
      clever-dove-749

      That 'just submit documentation' line is a stall tactic, full stop. They're hoping you don't know what to submit so the claim sits open forever or you just accept a lowball check to make it go away. Don't cash anything they send until you're actually satisfied with the number.

    • 18
      hearty-owl-234

      I'll be real with you — from the inside, 'provide documentation' usually means the adjuster is waiting for you to anchor the number yourself so they can negotiate down from there. What you actually want to document is replacement cost, not purchase price. Pull current listings for the same or comparable items, screenshot everything with prices visible, and write a short note explaining why those are the only available options. The more you frame it as 'here is what it costs to replace this today,' the harder it is for them to just point at your original purchase price. Also, photos of the damage are essential if you haven't taken them already.

  • 14
    brave-heron-451

    Most states measure property damage by 'actual cash value' or 'replacement cost' depending on the policy and circumstances. For personal property that's damaged by a third party's negligence, you're generally entitled to be made whole — meaning restored to the position you were in before the loss. That doesn't automatically mean replacement cost, but it also doesn't automatically mean your original purchase price, especially if the market for that item has changed. Documenting current market value (sold listings, retailer prices, reseller prices) is your best argument. Keep records of every conversation with the adjuster too — dates, names, what was said.

  • 11
    plain-wolf-950

    Not legal advice, but worth knowing: the 'actual cash value' vs. 'replacement cost' distinction matters a lot here, and it often comes down to how you frame your demand. If the only way to actually replace what you lost costs significantly more than what you paid, that's a legitimate argument — and if the adjuster stonewalls you, a personal injury or property damage attorney can often get traction with a single letter. Many will do a free consult for something like this.

  • 10
    spry-tern-009

    Go on eBay and whatever other resale platforms apply, search for your item, filter by 'sold' listings so you're showing actual transaction prices — not just what people are asking. Screenshot a handful of those. Then also grab a couple of listings for brand-new retail versions. That's your documentation. It's not complicated; it's just annoying that they make you do the legwork.

  • 9
    swift-kestrel-727

    I'm so sorry this happened to you! It's bad enough that someone drove into your yard, but then having to fight for fair compensation on top of it is just exhausting. I hope you're okay otherwise — that must have been really startling to deal with.

    • 3
      level-overpass411

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 8
    clever-tern-717

    Just to make sure I'm understanding — did the driver's insurance confirm in writing that they're accepting liability, or was that just a verbal thing on the phone? Because 'accepting fault' verbally and actually issuing a written acceptance are different things, and I'd want to make sure that's locked in before putting a ton of effort into documenting values.

    • 3
      curious-rider631

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.